HurryKane wrote:dhweather wrote:Nice discussion folks.
I still think we need some form of accountability for people that are ABLE
to evacuate but REFUSE to evacuate.
Just from a business case, the US has invested a fortune in training
first responders. Why should they go out immediately after a hurricane
for folks that refused to leave? Let them sit a day or two, it won't kill
them. Hell, people sat on their roof in New Orleans for 4-6 days.
Again, hurrcanes are like terrorist attacks in one aspect - you only
have to be wrong once and you may very well die. Fortunately, we
have MUCH better intelligence for hurricanes, plenty of time to prepare,
and know the consequences.
Ouch. I'm going to have to disagree with you on this one, bud. How are you going to determine which ones refused to leave, and which ones couldn't? Maybe they didn't know about it (it's plausible), maybe they aren't familiar with the danger that a hurricane of a certain strength brings because they are new to the area/don't watch the weather/etc. How do you know that the ones who stayed aren't without life-saving dialysis, medications, oxygen, what have you, and that those two days could mean the difference between life and death?
I would never be able to sit back and watch someone suffer when the means to help them is there, just because they made a mistake. You'd move heaven and earth to help Pootus no matter what she does, and all people deserve the same benefit of the doubt and help that you feel those close to you do.
Except you know, dummies who hang out in swamps.

In many cases, there were door to door evacuation notices by law
enforcement and other agencies. Make 'em sign a "I refused to
evacuate" order. Keep a list.
The bottom line is we must do a MUCH better job of evacuating, and
getting people to understand the risks. We must push responsibility down
to the individual level so they evacuate and not expect the government
to come bail them out "if it gets bad".
You are looking at what, $100 to evacuate? Yeah, that's a good chunk of
change. But look at the thousands of dollars per hour that search and
resuce costs, and compare.
I still applaud the residents of Galveston for their timely evacuation for
Rita. That's the way it should be done - textbook. I'd much rather
evacuate for no reason than be stuck on my roof for a week.